Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Hundreds Of Residents Warn Against Impacts Of Shale Gas Development In Cecil Township, Washington County

On May 8, hundreds of Washington County residents rallied at an event calling for greater safety at fracking well pads outside a Cecil Township Board of Supervisors hearing on oil and gas ordinances. 

In the parking lot steps from the meeting room, homeowners called for increases to zoning setbacks for new well pads that would improve area quality of life and reduce pollution in new and existing neighborhoods.

“Cecil Supervisors might want to hold these hearings quietly, but residents are at their breaking point with the danger and nuisance of these wells. People should have a say in whether someone builds a well pad 200 steps from their bedroom,” said Sarah Martik, a resident of Cecil Township and Executive Director of the Center for Coalfield Justice, which helped organize the rally with a coalition of residents and local businesses. 

“All we’re asking is for common sense from the Board: Increase setbacks and let new homeowners opt-in if they’re comfortable living closer,” Martik continued.

Area residents have previously lobbied the Board of Supervisors to consider the impact of existing setbacks on new housing developments, which are subject to noise, vibrations, and potential pollution when new wells are built within the current limit of 500 feet of areas already zoned for housing. 

Proponents of a greater setback distance, like the 2,500 feet recommended in 2020 report, say nearby wells damage the quality of life, and increasing setbacks would reduce exposure to noise and other pollution. 

They point to findings that pollution, vibrations, and vent flares endanger residents living on the border of the existing setback minimum.

“It’s like living in a dystopia when your home suddenly starts to shake apart. Our physical and mental health is on the line, and we can see the impact it has on children who get sick living alongside these wells,” said Janice Blanock, a Washington County resident and founder of Moms and Dads Family Awareness of Cancer Threat Spike (MAD-FACTS). 

The Board of Supervisors hearing convened at 6:00 p.m. the day of the hearing and was live streamed on the internet via Cecil Township’s official YouTube channel

Said Michelle Stonemark, “Homeowners who think they’re moving to a nice neighborhood are being tortured by the noise, the flares, the constant vibrations. We should not be driven from brand-new homes by these new wells. It feels like we’re going backward when we want cleaner, safer, healthier homes for families in Washington County. Increasing these setbacks is the right thing to do.”

A 2020 grand jury report issued under then-Attorney General Josh Shapiro found that industry leaders, regulators, and the Department of Environmental Protection had not adequately protected state residents from the impacts of fracking.  Read more here.

The report stated that 500-foot setback rules were “inadequate” and recommended an increase of 2,000 feet alongside criminal indictments for two drilling companies, including Washington County-based Range Resources. 

NewsClips:

-- WTAE: Concerns Over Fracking In Cecil Township, Washington County

-- KDKA: Cecil Township Residents Raise Concerns About Potential Fracking Plans

-- Observer-Reporter: Cecil Township Supervisors Continue To Ponder Changes To Oil & Gas Ordinance In Washington County

Related Articles This Week:

-- Two Months: Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Continues To Surround The Home Of A Senate Witness Who Opposes The Illegal Practice  [PaEN]

-- Moody & Associates Study Finds Discharge Of Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater To The Ground Surface ‘Not A Viable Management Practice'; Supports Ban On Road Dumping; Onsite Disposal  [PaEN]

-- DEP To Propose Changes To Coproduct Determination Process In Residual Waste Regulations; Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners Tried To Use This Process To Legalize Road Dumping Their Wastewater  [PaEN] 

-- Sen. Yaw To Introduce Bill To Punish Counties That Seek To Protect Their Residents From Impacts Of Natural Gas Thru Lawsuits  [PaEN]

NewsClips:

-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Abandoned Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Are Everywhere In PA; An Influx Of Funding Gives DEP New Urgency To Find, Plug Them 

-- Post-Gazette Editorial: When A Current Conventional Oil & Gas Operator Buys Wells They Assume All The Liabilities, While Not Passing Costs Of Plugging To Taxpayers; State Could Pay Some Of Costs

-- PA Capital-Star/Capital & Main: Oil/Gas Companies Must Set Aside More Money To Plug Wells On Federal Land Rule Says, But It Won’t Be Enough

-- StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: PA Senate Passes Bill To Change Permit Review For Energy Projects

-- WHYY: Plan To Move LNG Gas By Tanker Truck From PA To Proposed NJ Export Facility Moving Forward

-- Cleveland.com: Oil And Gas Wastewater Injection Wells Owned By Ohio Senator Are Leaking; State Paid $1.3 Million To Clean It Up

-- Marcellus Drilling News: Mountain Valley Gas Pipeline Ruptures In Water Pressure Test Near Roanoke, Virginia 

-- Reuters: US Natural Gas Output To Decline In 2024 As Producers Cut Drilling Activities, While Demand Rises To Record High - EIA  

-- Bloomberg: Europe Braces For Billions In Writedowns In Stranded Gas Assets As Fossil Fuels Are Phased Out 

-- Bloomberg: Build Out Of Approved US LNG Gas Export Terminals Delayed By Construction ‘Hiccups’ 

-- Reuters: Chinese Look To Buy Stake In Canadian LNG Gas Export Facility 

[Posted: May 8, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

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